Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 27
16,000 Garden Grove Residents Await Return as Chemical Tank Stabilizes at 92 Degrees
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 27

16,000 Garden Grove Residents Await Return as Chemical Tank Stabilizes at 92 Degrees

10 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 27
  • About 16,000 Garden Grove residents were still barred from returning Tuesday even after the damaged tank at GKN Aerospace cooled and appeared to stabilize.
  • Orange County fire officials said the pressurized container’s internal temperature, previously in the triple digits, had fallen to about 92 degrees after days of continuous water spraying.
  • The evacuation peaked near 50,000 people over Memorial Day weekend after responders determined the toxic tank had overheated and was at risk of bursting.
  • Officials had warned the failure could trigger either a major explosion or a hazardous chemical spill, prompting emergency declarations and a large-scale response at the Orange County aerospace plant.
After repeated safety fines, was the GKN chemical crisis a predictable disaster waiting to happen?
A clogged valve turned a chemical tank into a bomb. What was the critical engineering flaw, and could it happen again?
Beyond the mass evacuation, what are the hidden long-term costs for the community's health and environment?